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Hussain (L), with Zafarullah
Khan
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ISLAMABAD,
November 2 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Pakistan's pro-military
government party nominated its candidate for the post of Prime Minister
in the recently elected but splintered national parliament, party
officials said Saturday, November 2.
The
Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q), which scored the highest tally
with 103 seats won in the October 10 polls, formally agreed to nominate
Mir Zafarullah Khan Jamali, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Mr.
Jamali is our candidate for the Prime Ministership and we will make a
formal announcement to this effect Saturday (today)," PML-Q
parliamentary leader Chaudhary Shujaat Hussain told reporters.
Hussain
said the choice of Jamali, a former provincial Chief Minister from
southwestern Baluchistan province, was based on consensus.
No
single party secured the simple majority required to form a government
in the 342-seat house in the first polls since President Pervez
Musharraf seized power in a bloodless coup in October 1999.
Parties
remain deadlocked some three weeks after the elections, despite frantic
efforts to form coalitions.
Hussain
said Jamali's nomination followed consultations with the pro-government
National Alliance and the Muhajir-based Mutahidda Qaumi Movement (MQM),
which together control 33 seats.
The
PML-Q parliamentary leader said his party did not need to enter into a
coalition with the opposition Pakistan People's Party (PPP) of banned
ex-premier Benazir Bhutto - which landed 80 seats, the second highest
number in the polls.
Hussain
also said there would be no need for the PML-Q to coalesce with the
newly-powerful Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) alliance of six Islamic
parties, which won an unexpectedly high 59 seats.
Disputes
between parties as they attempt to form coalitions are centered on
controversial constitutional changes by Musharraf and bickering over key
posts, including the Premiership.
The
PML-Q and National Alliance, the opposition PPP, and the MMA agreed
Thursday, October 31, to appointment a pro-government figure to
negotiate on the changes, as part of a six-point agreement signed by
them all.
"The
parties appointed PML-Q parliamentary leader Hussain to negotiate with
the government on the Legal Framework Order because while some of the
articles are necessary, some are disputed," MMA spokesman Shahid
Shamsi told AFP.
The
Legal Framework Order is the ordnance under which Musharraf, flaunting
the requirement for parliamentary approval, unilaterally introduced 29
amendments to the 1973 constitution, sparking a storm of outrage.
The
PPP and MMA pledged throughout their campaign to overturn the most
controversial of the amendments, including presidential powers to sack
the elected parliament and the creation of a civilian-military National
Security Council tasked with overseeing the government.
The
MMA's opposition to key amendments has thwarted efforts by PML-Q, the
biggest seat winner, to woo the Islamic bloc, which won the balance of
power in the national assembly after huge vote gains.
Shamsi
said the MMA's main objection was the National Security Council.
It
also wanted parliament to be given the chance to approve or reject the
changes, and that Musharraf submit himself to a vote of confidence from
the parliament.
"The
PML-Q's Shujaat will be the bridge between the parties and the
government," he said.
The
agreement also declared the 1973 constitution a "unanimous document
which no-one should try to dispute."
It
stopped short of saying that nobody should try to change it.
Other
points of the agreement called on the government to convene the
parliament immediately, reaffirmed parliamentary supremacy and
sovereignty, and vowed to continue inter-party negotiations on
constitutional changes.
"All
four parties mutually agreed and signed the agreement," Shamsi
said.
Musharraf's
pledge on voting day to transfer power on November 1 will not be met.
No
date has been announced for convening the parliament, almost three weeks
since Pakistanis went to the polls.
The
decision to negotiate with the government on the amendments through a
pro-government politician, viewed widely in opposition circles as a
government stooge, could signal a back down on earlier opposition vows
to undo key constitutional changes.
Hussain
and Musharraf met for the first time Friday but no details of the
meeting emerged.
The
winning parties have urged Musharraf to name a date for parliament
immediately, saying a clear date would spur them to settle on a
coalition and break their deadlock.
Musharraf
told a cabinet meeting Thursday that he would set a date once the 60
reserved seats for women, 10 for non-Muslims, were finalized.
The
Election Commission announced Friday that all seats reserved for both
women and non-Muslim minorities had been finalized, and declared that
the house was ready to be called.
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